‘Ghost Adventures’ star’s wife, Victoria Goodwin, expected to have charge dropped | Courts | Crime


Victoria Goodwin, wife of 'Ghost Adventures' star Aaron Goodwin, is expected to have one charge dropped in a murder-for-hire plot against her husband if she pleads guilty to conspiracy.
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Prosecutors on Tuesday said that they would drop one of two charges against Victoria Goodwin, wife of “Ghost Adventures” star Aaron Goodwin, if she pleads guilty.

Victoria Goodwin, 32, appeared in Las Vegas Justice Court for negotiations regarding allegations that she planned, with the help of a Florida inmate, to have her celebrity husband killed. She was charged with solicitation to commit murder and conspiracy to commit murder.

Goodwin, who wore pink manicured nails, glasses, and her hair in a side braid, told Justice of the Peace Kristal Bradford that she would waive her right to a preliminary hearing.

Her lawyer, David Brown, added that the case would be bound to the District Court, where the solicitation charge would be dropped and she could enter a guilty plea to the conspiracy charge.

After the brief hearing, Brown told reporters that Goodwin could receive anything from probation to a maximum of 10 years in prison.

Goodwin’s arrest report said that she was living in Las Vegas with her husband, known for his role in the reality television series “Ghost Adventures,” when their relationship began to sour.

The Metropolitan Police Department’s investigation into Victoria Goodwin stemmed from an October cellphone seizure at the Okeechobee Correctional Institution, a state prison in Florida. Corrections officers took a Motorola cellphone from Grant Amato, an inmate at the facility, and sent it to a cellphone lab, where detectives downloaded and searched its contents, police said.

The arrest report said that as investigators went through the contents of the device, they found text and Facebook messages between Amato and a woman, later identified as Goodwin, who “seemed to be planning a murder-for-hire plot.” It was then that Florida law enforcement contacted Metro.

On March 12, six days after his wife was arrested, Aaron Goodwin filed for divorce. Court documents said it had become “impossible” for the two to live together in marital harmony. A couple of weeks later, he thanked his supporters on Instagram.

“Thank you everyone for all the love and support through this emotionally trying time,” the post read. “It has really helped a lot and I appreciate you all.”

An earlier version of this story misstated the terms of an agreement with prosecutors.

Contact Akiya Dillon at adillon@reviewjournal.com

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